CNN Anchor Hits Insurers for 'Preying on the Most Vulnerable People'; Ignores Their Blame of ObamaCare

CNN's Carol Costello accused insurance companies of "preying on the
most vulnerable people" in dropping doctors from health plans, even
after CNN interviewed a doctor and an insurance representative saying
that ObamaCare regulations made it harder for companies to keep doctors
on insurance plans.

After the report by correspondent Chris Frates on an elderly woman who
had to choose between higher premiums or the loss of her doctor,
Costello lashed out at the insurance companies: "Well you know what's
really scary, Mrs. Sabatino is well, right? She has the energy to fix
the problem, but not all elderly people do. It's like they're preying on the most vulnerable people in our country."

Costello ignored the woman's doctor who did mention ObamaCare
regulations, as Frates reported: "But the doctor thinks United
[Healthcare] is trimming physicians from its network because under
ObamaCare it's harder to drop patients."

And as Frates reported later, "The insurance industry trade group
argues that the changes are a direct result of ObamaCare." Yet Costello
was content to bash the insurers for "preying on" the elderly without
mentioning ObamaCare.

Below is a transcript of the segment, which aired on CNN Newsroom on December 19 at 10:25 a.m. EST:

CAROL COSTELLO: You may have a favorite restaurant or even a regular
mechanic but there may be no business relationship more valued than a
long-standing partnership with a trusted doctor. Now a staggering number
of older Americans are discovering that their long-time doctors are
being dumped from their insurance plans, and that leaves them with some
difficult and expensive choices to make. CNN's Chris Frates is with our
investigations unit. He joins us live from Washington. Tell us more.

CHRIS FRATES: So, Carol, what we're learning is that because ObamaCare
makes it tougher for insurance companies to drop their patients, that
instead it appears that now they're dropping the doctors, and that's
hurting thousands of patients across the country in at least a dozen
states.

(Video Clip)

JODY SABATINO, insured senior: I'm decorating and I'm making the curtains up there.

FRATES (voice-over): Jody Sabatino is like many seniors. She sees multiple doctors and takes lots and lots of medication.

(On camera): How many prescriptions do we have here?

SABATINO: Okay, one, two, three, four, five, six –

FRATES (voice-over): Last month the 79-year-old got some jaw-dropping
news. Her insurance company, UnitedHealthcare, is cutting four of her
six physicians from its Medicare Advantage Plan, including her most
trusted doctor. Dr. Lawrence Mieczkowski or "Dr. Mitch" to patients like
Jody. The cardiometabolic specialist will be unceremoniously dumped
from United's Medicare Advantage network January 1st with little
explanation. Or, as United put it in a letter --

FRATES: But the doctor thinks United is trimming physicians from its
network because under Obamacare it's harder to drop patients.

MIECZKOWSKI: Let those high-cost patients move out of the
UnitedHealthcare Medicare Advantage Plan over to Anthem or Humana and
let those poor suckers, so to speak, you know, pay – pick up the cost.

FRATES: United's decision left Jody and her 94-year-old husband Nick
facing a tough choice. Do they stay with United and find new doctors or
try to keep their doctors by finding a new insurance plan?

SABATINO: Dr. Mieczkowski has been my doctor for 20 years. No one knows
me any better than he does and it's silly not to continue to go with
him.

FRATES: So Jody went shopping.

SABATINO: This was inexpensive, this was expensive.

FRATES: And the plan she bought is going to cost her much more.

(On camera): Do you have any sense of how much more than will end up costing you?

SABATINO: These will be double.

FRATES (voice-over): Jody and Mieczkowski are not alone. The American
Medical Association says United and other insurers have taken similar
action in at least a dozen states. In Connecticut, for example, United
cut about 20 percent of its doctors, according to the State Medical
Society, and here in Ohio, the insurance giant dropped hundreds of
doctors affecting thousands of patients.

TODD BAKER, Ohio State Medical Association: The patient costs a lot and
United is going to those patients' doctors and dropping them. And
therefore getting rid of the patient.

FRATES: United concedes it is reducing the size of its network, but
declined an on-camera interview request. In a statement to CNN, United
said, "Many health plans are making changes to their networks to improve
quality and keep health insurance affordable. These changes are
necessary to meet rising quality standards in an era of Medicare funding
cuts." The Insurance Industry Trade Group argues that the changes are a
direct result of Obamacare. To help pay for health care reform
lawmakers included $200 billion in cuts to the Medicare Advantage
program and a new tax on health insurers.

ROBERT ZIRKELBACH, America's Health Insurance Plans: Washington can't
cut and tax the Medicare Advantage program this much and not expect
seniors in the program to be harmed.

FRATES: Even though Jody Sabatino was able to find a plan that included
Dr. Mitch, she is still going to lose two other doctors.

SABATINO: We're walking away from people that we've known and trusted and counted on for over 10 years, and that's hard.

(End Video Clip)

CHRIS FRATES: Now Carol, Dr. Mieczkowski tells me that the vast
majority of his patients who are affected by United's decision followed
Jody's lead, and got a new insurer so they could continue seeing Dr.
Mieczkowski. And that's really not a surprise here. I talked to another
of the doctor's patients who told me that if you looked at the directory
of doctors that patients could go to this year, there's about 25 pages.
When you look at what will be offered next year, that booklet is only
five pages long.

CAROL COSTELLO: Well you know what's really scary, Mrs. Sabatino is
well, right? She has the energy to fix the problem, but not all elderly
people do. It's like they're preying on the most vulnerable people in
our country, and it's –

FRATES: Well that's right, Carol. And what Jody told me was that she was
very fortunate. They had a health advisor who Dr. Mitchkowski helped
set them up with to go over all their options, because these are
spreadsheets, they have a number. She's on eight different medications.
She needs to find out how many are covered, how many of my six doctors
can I able to bring over to this new network. So it is complicated, and
she was lucky and she will tell you that I am lucky that I'm able to
figure this all out. But it was certainly very stressful for her and for
many, many seniors across the country who are facing a similar
situation.

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